Evening Star Newspaper, August 12, 1927, Page 18

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s 18 WOMAN' S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1927. FEATURES. Sign Posts on Path to Success Willie Willis Haye zous D t h _D . l —_ I}‘ggols)&l)ll"‘lfi Figured and Plain Goods in Frocks BY LYDIA LE BARON WALK_I;JR. BY ROBERT QUILLEN. | fin fi'uay"}fl;:u Oro y lx, rg:‘n:':a:‘:‘/{w BY MARY MARSIIALL—— Saturday, August 13. Astrologers read tomorrow as an exceedingly unpropitious day. and | Frocks of figured materials are smart, but those of figured material | stantiality that makes them entlrely There s no “royal road” to success to “see our wa We have turned i appropriate for street wear. In any enterprise, whether it be in |the spotlight of right thinking on the | Why Is It That We Put Our Best Foot Forward | the business world or in the sphere | situation and it penetrates like an 4 . 4 L i - Don't imagine because it is the 12th of the home, but there is a way that | X-ray, | ~ q ) W M counsel caution in all matters of im- Iplus some plain material .are even|gay or August and because Winter We must follow this with the second | | For Strangers and Keep Our Worst Manners feortance. = = 0 @ ey as turs are to bo bought and milliners element, which is constructive think- | d > o are showing Autumn hats that Sum « | - - ’ sume a critical and fault-finding atti- inténe ¢ Tnaking 4 mg. We must begin immediately to { r Tove? L a mer has any intention of making a find a path that will not For 1]1056 We Real]) Love? tude which is unfavorable to persons speedy farewell. I think that one of out, but on to a higher pla - co s the home tr in business associa- the mistakes most of us make with N ing r o ions. our Summer clothes is in not realiz then ascending toward success. Tire " b hay clouds eitk r"men n‘n-m-“umlcr nm} I one of Booth Tarkington's stories he tells of a man who was most happily | ‘The see f’lvfl'{e'\fl"hhar\n rfl(l_h‘d ing how long warm weather re | “right lig or else we rise above | | " married. and who, in boasting of the good qualities of his wife, always j“:";“":“;fl“,” “‘h'i‘;h“’“"”‘ il i Iar:li_&“‘am s o B 3 | the! i vel v mger | | g yric by saying: ‘'3 s| 2 vays trea as i L Yo = . o mid-August we let our Sin {them. 1In either event they no longer | i“mmd up his panegyric by saying And she has always treated me as if 1 dent while this sway prevails than mer wardrobes run down. Wae | dim our path. We can see clearly. | were a perfect stranger.” | We are constructing because we are | not only seeing but making a w: is at other times. Campalgns against it sending things to the cleaner begin to feel that v w soon ha By which the fortunate husband meant that his wife had shown to him organized vice, oo sy IF¥ WE LET OUR MENTAL SIGHT PIERCE THE SITUATION WITH ITS DIFFICULTIES, Wk HAVE BEGUN TO SEE THE WAY OUT, JUST AS WE DISCOVER THE RIGHT PATH BY PEERING ABOUT WHEN IN A STRANGE COUNTRY. leads to this desired goal. The trav- . eler who constantly rises above what others would believe are insurmount- able obstacles and who threads his way around or through perilous diffi- | culties need have no fear of ultimately arriving. He or she will be consid- “lucky”* and be ‘looked upon with envious eyes, with jealous eyes or with eves of appreciation and clear conception, according to the mirror of the personalities of those regarding him—or her. There are some guides to the path which act as sign posts pointing the way. The first is right thinking. No one who allows discouragements to cloud his mind can see clea enough to discern these Kkindly indications. No one who fills his thoughts with adverse ideas can focus on true vision and insight, Such thoughts crystal-clear reflectors, and thinking is misleading because refractions are faulty. The Right Light. We are all familiar with the expres- sion “he doesn’t see things in the right light,” and then we sometimes wonder what this correct vision is. One ele- ment in it is penetration. If we can let our mental eyesight pierce the situ- ation, with its clouding difficulties, its towering obstacles or perhaps its menacing implications, we have begun wrong the BEDTIME STORIES Mrs. Coyote Returns. Forget revenge; ' Get even in some other way. —Old Mother West Wind. If ever there was a scared Covote, that Covote was Mrs. Coyote when one of Buster Bear's irrepressible cubs landed on her. You know, she had been curled up fast asleep and dreaming. The young cub had been pushed by his sister, and when he saw what was going to happen he was as badly scared as a young cub could be. The result was he had all his claws out and his arms and lezs were moving almost before he ) AND CUFFED AND HED AND BIT. landed, in his effort to get aw Now, a little by claws are s They dug into Mrs. Covote. wakened with a velp of dismay and for a minute Mrs. Coyote and that lictle Bear were all mixed up, each | trying to get away from the other. Mrs. Covote didn’t ki who it was She smelled Bear and that was enot for her. She had just been dreamin wout Buster Bear and she was sure that this was Duster Bear himself, So the instant she was free she streaked down the path as fast as her feet w take her, her tail be tween b B Meanwhile the mischievous littl cub who had pushed her brother was rolling over and over on the ground with glee. Yes, sir, she was so! She kicked her heels. She fairly squealed, As for her brother, he lost his temper. Really he had been quite as badly | frightened as had Mrs. Coyote. When I 2lways figsh with flies, for worms Repel me as they squ;rm about. Thus worms are safe From me, And so, I must admat, are trout. (AR need | urmounting obstacles” is in con- ve thinking. We must not only | see our way but we must make the th by treading our way. There is joy in taking such steps, The reaction of constructive thinking is satisfaction mixed with pleasure. Parents who build a home on right thinking need never have fear of suc- cess. The foundation is sure. Happi- ness and contentment are the very framework and in it there abides Dpeace. LITTLE BENNY BY BY FANNY Y, CORY. £ PAPE, | | | Our cook Nora thased me out of the kitchin this afterneon on account |of me keeplng on asking her for | sampels of things, giving me a push and saying, Now stay out ware you | belong ‘or 11l give you a sampel of a | good slap. Making me feel like revendge, and pritty soon the doorbell rang and it was some man with no necktie on and a hole in his hat, saying, Is the lady in, little boy, ask her if she'd please kindly help a poor man that hasent had a bite to eat all day. | Meening himself, and 1 sed, Come | |on in and you can ask her vourself. | Well, if you insist, the man sed. | And he came in the hall and started to stand there nerviss, and 1 sed, Go |on in the frunt room and sit down. goln’ ' make us a good meal, soon as [ gets ’iss campfire goin' big. NANCY PAGE | "0, 1 better not, he sed, and I sed. o R 5 | Sure, go on, G wizzickers, and he sed. It is Easy to Can Pll!lns in | Well, it wasent my ideer. And he Summer for Winter Salads | went in and sat down on the edge of |a chair as if he was trying to see how neer he could come to sitting down | without axually doing it, and I went ib:.u‘k to the kitchin saying, Hay Nora, there’s some man in the frunt room | wunts to see you. And I quick ran out and got behind { the hall door and Nora came out dr: | ing her hands, saying, To see me, wat | for, wats he wunt, this is a queer thing. And she went in the frunt room and I peeked in and the man got up off the chair, being easy to do on account of not hardly being on it, saying, Madam, I havent had a bite to_eat today. Well as heaven is me witniss 1 never seen sutch gall in me life, wat do you meen by tracking up peeples good parlers with your big muddy eet. izzent_the back gate good enuff |for you? Nora sed, and the man sed, I was invited in heer free and equal. Well now vour invited out agen, vou and your breth that smells like a brewry waggon in the old days, and if 1 catch that boy he'll lern a few things, Nora sed, an the man sed, 1f I catch him Il lern him a liberal education, dont you touch me or Il have the law on you. And he went out with Nora making pushing motlons at him, and I stayed in back of the hall door about five minnits and then I snuck out and neither one of them cawt me. « BY FLORENCE L NKE. Nancy never felt so much a house- wife as she did on days when she put up fruit for Winter use. She knew that some of the commercially canned goods were far superior to anything she could put up, but with spare time and her mother’s garden and orchard close at hand It seemed foolish not to put up a few things. She was delighted when the gar- dener told her he had green gage plums. She liked to use the canned plums for luncheon salads. She re- BY THORNTON W. BURGESS | Mrs. Coyote started down the path, he | | started up the path. | 'Now the memories of little bears, memories of little boys, are nding he wasn't being chased. he stopped Then very cautiously he peered behind him. He saw nothing | vote, but he did see his twin | with joy. tight away he became angry. His i ced a joke on him. It was she who had pushed him and | moved the pits, inserted cream cheese softened with preserved ginger sirup and served three plums on a leat of romaine with a_mayonnaise dressing made richer with whipped cream. To can the fruit she washed the plums and pricked each one with a given him such a fright. Right away that little bear forgot all about Mrs. Coyote and everything else, except getting even with his sister. Tle stole | | back. Then with an angry little growl | he jumped on her. When she felt his sharp teeth and his sharp claws, she squealed for a moment. Then she put 'l"':"kn Q:Ljf‘r'fz;‘y:l‘\""‘m S m::]l her own sharp teeth and sharp claws | (0" ks St an B D e os Gresdtult| While boiling bot over the plums Tt wich o and caired, and)ac packed into sterilized jars. The and bit nd elawed, as only two little | Sterilized rubbers and caps were put :“:!N . 2 - Y 1, and the cans were partially sealed Aun el T . ¥ Nanc t the jars in her heat-re e e Mus, Covote had | inted oven and cooked them the stated long to know that she wasn't being | Ime at stated temperature. After re followed. Presently she stopped run. | MOVINE from oven the jars were given ning. Then she heard the noise made | fina! seal, and sct to cool. by those two quarreling little bear: (Copyrizht. 1027.) It came to her just what had ha pened. She knew that it O NOTES Buier Bear who haa siven ner that| | HOME | fright, but one of Buster's cubs. The thought made her angry. It made her very angry indeed. It would have Leen bad enough to e given such a fright by Buster Bear, | gyyieq in decorative accessories and Gl S D small pieces of furniture change in by two little cubs hardly vet be- | pil S ligiv* (5 4o the styles in larger pieces. The reason is obvious. One can afford to purchase a new coffee stand, magazine rack or hang- {ing shelf much more often than a new living room or dining room suite, or even a desk. Here are two of the newest small BY JENNY WREN, |r | yona their milk teeth was more than |any self-regpecting Coyote could bear. | Mrs. Coyote snarled to herself. “I'l each those young cubs a lesson,” said “I'll teach them to show some respect 10 their elders. I'll teach them that they have no business over here |in the Old Pastur With the hair on her shoulders | standing on end and with her lips drawn back in an ugly snarl, Mr: Coyote boldly advanced toward where | <he could hear those two little qua reling cubs. When she reached the place where she could see them and | discovered how very little they were, 1l thought of possible trouble left her. | rinly were too small to fight | | ud she would teach them a les- on they would never forget. Without | n looking to right or left, Mrs. | [Coyote hurried forward to a point | where, with a single leap, she could | t [tand on those two little bears. And | | Still they didn't see her, or suspect that she was anywhere near, and no | one but Sanmy Jay saw some one else | looking on. It was Mother Bear. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. pleces bring fashion rightness to any living Words often misused—Don't say [room . ‘I drunk three cups of coffee.”’ | The minfature table, for smoking " is the past tense. accouterments or for coffee, iy made | mispronounced — Eau de|of beechwood in a natural, light cologne. Propounce o-deko-lon, all|brown finish. The top of grayish {o's as® in e unstressed, accent | marble, veined sen and encircl Jon last syllable. with a’ little brass railing | Often misspelled—Wholesome; Te. The magazine holder is of wood | Synonyms — Negligent, neglectful,| and may -be had in Chinese red, jade | heedless, careless, thoughtless, remiss, | reen, mauve, dellt blue, ivory or BIIHBEY ADANDRCENRE O | bla 1t is expecially convenient for Word study—*“Use a word three|¢ArT¥ing a number of magazines | times and it fs yours.” It us in.|APout from room to room. crease our vocabulary by mastering = one word each y. 'Today's word:| Vaccination or re cination of a Humidity; dampness, moisture. *“The | the inhabitants of Chile within a ¥ humidity ‘of the atmosphere was op-' ras been ordered by local health of- pressive.” fcialgy 'Ese weeners I found in th' ice-box | which might be employed to | | trom thelr own firesid | day. | views. we give to those who care nothing for us and for whom we care nothing. This is so universally the case that we have coined a phrase for it and speak of our “company dinners” and “company manners’ and “company clothes,” which we regard as too good for domestic consumption. Any old thing will do for those of our own household. They can't get away, and so there is no use in wasting any politeness or civility or charm upon them. Yet this lack of good manners in the home circle is what makes marriage a fallure oftener’ than anything else. For it is not the big sins that bring most couples into the divorce court. quarrels, the insults, the brutal criticisms, the petty tyrannies that kill love and that make lifo together an unendurable misery. .. IT is pitiful to think that after five years of marriage all that the husband and wife ask of those to whom they are married is to be treated as well as they would treat an utter stranger! That would turn their homes from a purgatory into a paradise. That would change their marriages from bitter failures to glorious successes. That would make their dreams come true. For how do we treat strangers? We make an effort to make ourselves attractive to them. The laziest and the most slovenly woman dolls herself up for strangers. She combs her hair in its most becoming way. She puts on her complexion d a pretty frock if she is going to meet some one she never saw before. If company is coming, the most untidy housekeeper goes on an orgy of cleanings, and the woman who fecds her family out of paper bags and tin cans gets up a good dinner. Mighty few husbands would grow tired of their wives and wander away if they knew that they were going to find at home, when they returned of an evening, a woman who had on her company looks and her company clothes and that there would be a company dinner on the table. And it would put pep into many a woman's housekeeping, and keep her from slumping Into one of the disgruntled wives who ask, “What's the use of trying to pleaxe a husband who never notices how I look, or how much T save on the butcher's bill,” if men would pay their wives the same compli- ments that they do to their hostess when they are dining out. When we meet strangers we make an effort to entertain and amuse them. We don’t sit up in sullen silence through a long evening. We don’t inflict on hem a detailed story of everything that has gone wrong with us during the We don't wet-blanket every proposal they make for some amusement. On_the contrary, we bring out our little budget of stories and our best jokes. We relate any little amusing incident that has happened to us and any news we have heard, and we feign an interest, even if we do not have a real one, in what our new acquaintance is telling us and listen politely while he gives his views on the future of aeronautics, or relates how many miles he | made a day on his last auto trip. . [' these tactics were introduced into the home circle, it would change the whole domestic atmosphere. No longer would husbands and wives sit up of an evening in a silence so thick you could cut it with a knife. For the very husbands who never say a word at home are the ones who set the table in a roar abroad. And the peevish, fretful wives whose husbands grab their hats as soon as they have swallowed their dinners and heat it to keep from having to listen to their complaints are the very ladies who charm every stranger with their sweetness and graciousness. If husbands and wives would use on each other a little of the line that they use on strangers, there wouldn't be so many married people out on a still hunt for soulmates who don't bore them. We don't argue with strangers when we don’t happen to agree with their We consider the man and woman lacking in savoir faire who get into quarrels with casual acquaintances. Privately, we may think those sho differ with us ignorant and.silly, or lacking in taste, but we don't feel called upon to tell them so, or go to the mat with them. We simply change the subject, and keep our own opinion and let them keep theirs undisturbed. If we treated our husbands and wives that way, it would eliminate the family spat that keeps everybody's nerves raw, and that makes the average home like living over a volcano that may explode at any moment. Why should husbands and wives quarrel over everything over which they disagree, from politics to pie? Why should they argue over topics on which they know they differ? Why shouldn't they concede each other the right to an individual opinion it they are willing to concede the same right to a perfect stranger? Iy i v, we do not fecl called upon tu tell a stranger home truths. We do not tell a strange woman that she is getting fat, or that her hat is too young for her. We do not tell a strange man that we have heard his story before, or that his table manners are atrocious. But we ruthlessly that cut to the quick, and then we wonder that they seek elsewhere the flattery and admiration without which they cannot live. Perhaps there would be no more unfaithful husbands and wives if the women and men to whom they were married treated them as if they were strangers. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1927.) The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1927.) Across. 2 . Hampered. 3. For example (abbr.). 4 racteristic, Notable period. 5. Act wildly. . Anger. 6. Opera. ote of the scale. 7. Ang . Proceed. 8. Kind of post. Moving wagon. 4. Notable period. . Bird. 10. Ardent desire. | Life. 20, Selling. . Employ. 1. Molten rock. . Pronoun. Roman ejaculation. Preposition. . High priest of Tsrael. | Roman_household god. Rise of the ocean, . 550 (Roman). Smallest. Inferior adoration. . Swelling. . Youth, | 34. Means of defense. . Total. . Breathe with difficulty. . Foolish person. . Card game, . Hail, . Openings. . Greek letter, odule of earth. Toward the top. . Chinese prefecture. . Roman deity. . Maid loved by Zeus. . According to. Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. 46, Wickedness, 47. Steal. 48. Gold (symbol). 19, Swimming pool. Down. 1. Rul Cocoa Icing. together one pound of powdered sugar and one-half Cream thoroughly L E E RIE] Glr|A] s/ ]c/sEMDIRIE[S[S] a cupful of butter. Dissolve four tablespoonfuls of cocoa in four or five tablespoonfuls of hot coffee. Mix with the creamed sugar and butter. Spread between and on top of layer cake. EE0E_BOHE It te the little rudenesses, the picking of | v wound our own husbands and wives with criticisms | have the augury of prosperous live: | DIARY OF A NEW FATHER BY BOB DICKSON. Thursday Afternoon. Tonight is the night of the bridge | party that a friend of Joan's is giv- ing in our honor, and it is bad enough to have to go to a bridge party any time, let alone on vacation, i time' it is worse on | wants to make sure none of her old gang will think she made a mistake when she married me. Your wife thinks herself that marrs ing you w { not want anybody else to her about it. gree with This morning she said, “Bob! Do vou know what vou've done?’ and I | said, “Just recently?” and she said, Fou forgot to bring your tuxedo from hom: 1 said Oh, no, T didn’t,” and she said, “Well, where is it?” and I said, “Back home.” She said, “Thej forgot to bring it.” and I said, didn’t; T remembered not to forget and bring 1 - She said, “Well, what are you goin to wear to the bridge party tonight? I said, “Clothes,” and she said, “That suit you have on, 1 suppose?” and I said, “Yes, ma'am.” My mother said, “Oh, Bob, you should have brought your tuxedo,” and Joan said, “And just when I wanted him to look. his best, too!” I said, “Why be so particular how I look when I'm on vacation?” and Joan said, “People judge you by how my friends to be impressed with how successful my husband is®” 1 said, “Just tell them I'm so ‘suc- cessful I don't have to care how I look.” Joan sald, *What can we do?” and my mother proved that your mother is not always your best friend, after all, on account of she said, “Perhaps we can bo w a tuxedo from some one.” Isaid, ““Ha, ha. Dad’s won't fit me, and neither will Joan's father's,” and | Joan said, “But my brother Bill's will | fit you,” and I said, “Ha, ha,” again, |on accpunt of he wouldn’t lend you | anything. But you are silly to laugh and think you are winning an argu- ment with women, on account of Joan and my mother did not ask Bill to lend it; thev just went over to his house and took it. Sweetbread and Mushrooms. One and onehalf cups chopped mushroom caps, one .parboiled sweet- bread (chopped), one cup thick white sauce, one-quarter cup stale bread crumbs, two egg yolks, two egg whites, chopped red pepper, one-half teaspoon salt. Have ready buttered timbale molds and fill the mixture into these, taking care to have it come to within about one-fourth inch of the tops of the molds. Set the molds in a pan of hot water. Cover with oiled paper and bake quarter of an hour. skin care. proved rules exist that beauty ex- perts agree on. Today a nightly habit of thou- sands of women is responsible for complexions more beautiful than any other country boasts. One week's test yourself will prove its results. It is the way that millions. have ac- quired that schoolgirl complexion. Just do this before you go to bed | . at night. Wash the face gently with Palmolive. Massage its balmy olive and palm oil lather into the skin. Rinse with warm water: then with department stores. Powder flo 1937 B1ack F1ag Co. Children born on that day prob- ably will be studious and of a | philosophical trend of thought. They | but this | ccount of Joan s a mistake, but she does | you look, and don’t you think I want | ‘FollowThis Rule To keep the charm of “That Schoolgirl Complexion” By NORMA SHEARER EVER try unproved methods in | Not when simple | for keeping that schoolgirl compiexion. ‘“Watch them drop’ Anp THEY AL Drop—DEAD. Black Flag kills every fly and mosquito in your home. Rids your home of roaches and other bugs, too! Sold at drug, grocery, hardware and FIGURED AVY BLUE WHITE SILK 18 CLE COMBINED WITH PLATM OF NAVY BLUE IN MER FROCK. THIS SUM- | smarter, and I have been surprised to seo how uninterruptedly the fashion 3 I c : me S b | prophesied long before they were Autumn clothes to The Fearless Step. “i?;yeer('zutrll\;:“Qh‘}lsv::::::m;“::fle[l::(m(.l;fl:..‘".—::xn(rén?r,,",;”;fi:,',vf,?:,,,'"’ ";";“‘l’;:“: | started in any State, are to be wid Bt tlieve are daysof eatly Ants | Obstacles also dwindle in size when | | she had made as dofinite an effort to be pleasant and agreeable {o him as she | SPrcad in the Autumn, when the W | and days of Indian Summer after that |the focus of right thinking is on| «Skinny thinks measles is the worst | would to a casual acquaintance 6o will lead in t reforms. when light-weight Summer frocks a ! them or we see that there is a road | gisease, but when you got mumps it 3 . Strikes are ferecast in certain gar- | entirely appropriate. Though we do up them leading in the direction We | pyres'so bad you want to ery an’ you| Perhaps to most this little story will seem funny. To me it s full of | NCNt:making trades that will be af- ENantisandngfthal ne nMas W want o go. ‘Then we surmount obsta- | cun't hecause eryin' makes it hurt | heart-breaking pathos because it is such a tragic thing that we should treat | [eC{ed by a new fashion. |ousht to keep our stock of light olea and wilih aach Step apivand 0Lt yoree, ! those we love, and those whose happiness depends upon our attitude toward | Spectlation should be avoided. Jres i things welk replovisbes | vision gets clearer. Our minds supply (Covsright. 1027.) | them, worse than we do the veriest strangers that cross cur paths. Worse, |, LerSons whose birth dafe it is may SOm R peINing ot ieD by | move and more constructive material | even, than we do our enemies. 2 ** | have disturbing and puzziing events [ mer frocks, it you have a printe | from which to lay the stones of the e e ; to meet in (he coming year which crepe or georgette frock that is beg | road 1o succ The initial process SONNYSAY]NGS It is a strange paradox that the best we have und the best that is in us should end happily. ning to look a bit fagged, why freshen it up with a touch of plair colored material in harmonizing colo: “There are few women who cou not make 100 per cent more of them selves if they tried,” said a prominent Iressmaker the other day. And then added nd no woman is hopeless.” “hic today,” said this observer, “lies in looking unstudied and ea The smart woman today looks ea dressed and gives the idea tha clothes are not in her thoughts. You cannot help but like the pattern I have for you this week. With it you ecan make the most effective bit of trimmings for an overblouse I have seen in ever so long—lovely roses, made from a bit of shaded ribbon, held her in position with easy one-two-threa stitch and a few glistening beads. 1t you want to see it, just send a stamped, self-addressed envelope. (Copyright. 1027.) DAILY DIET RECIPE Spinach Balls in Cheese. Cooked spinach, one and one-half cups. Grated American cheese, three tablespoons. Flour, ono tablespoon, Deep fat, one cup. SERVES SIX PORTIONS. The spinach should be well season for these figured frocks continues with | the best-dressed women. Not only at resorts but for wear in town you will see them, and the addition of the panel | or drape or flounce of the dark, plain | material seems to given even the thin- | nest of figured crepes an air of sub- | McKAY WILCOX PUTNAM, KITTY BY NINA The girl friend says she wonders if the country will go dry next elec- tion, or if it will just stay silent, (Cooyright, 1927, Ask Your Grocer for That Delie s Dessert California Pudding | Price, 10 Cents | Wholesale Distributor H. CARPEL, Inc. Rear 1361 H St. New, Guaranteed pure imported POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL Sold Everywhere cold. That is all—it’s nature’s rule If your skin is inclined to be natu- rally dry, apply a little good cold cream. Do that regularly, and particu- larly at night. Note how much better your skin in even one week. GET REAL PALMOLIVE Costs but 10c a cake. Use no other 1 ur face. But be sure you get GENUINE Palmolive. Crude imi- tations, represented to be of olive and palm oils, are not the same as Palmolive. ~ Remember that and TAKE CARE. The Palmolive-Peet Co., Chicago, U. S, A, 15¢ up, and | in ed. Left over spinach is good to use. This amount will make 18 1-inch balls. Form the spinach into balls, roll in the mixed flour and cheese and fry deep very hot fat until golden brown. Drain on soft paper and serve hot. Nice accompaniment to broiled ham or steak. DIET NOTE. _Recips contains lime, fron and vitamins A and B. Can be eaten by normal adult of average weight or hing to add weigh GOOD POSITIONS AND FINE INCOMES Tearooms. Restaurants. Cafetert Motor Inns, Candy. Gift and Fe Shops need trained men women. Earn $2.500 to § a year. Classes now forming. LEWIS HOTEL TRAL SCHOOL Peansylvania_ A d Flash drives spots from rugs and carpets UNsiGuTLY grease stains or spots need not ruin your rugs. Frasu will make them look like new. Frasit kills grease—actually dissolves it —the most revolutionary cleaning fluid ever made. Use Frasi to bring back the luster of upholstered furni- ture too. Always keep FLasH . on hand. Get it at drug, de- partment or shoe stores. Frast is unburnable. Does not injure the finest fabrics. Prices: 2 bottle 30c; 8-0:. bollle 60c; bottle $1; 1-gallon boltle $4. Manu- Jactured by John C. Stalfort e Sons, Inc., Baltimore, M d. Est.1868 FLASH oz. * *

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